This site uses cookies.

29 July 2009 - Civil Procedure

Statement Recording the Fact that Legal Advice Has Been Given is Not Necessarily Privileged
Digicel v. Cable&Wireless, ChD, 17/6/09
Morgan J. held that statements that referred to the fact that a party had sought legal advice, but made no reference whatsoever to the content of the legal advice received, did not in themselves give rise to an implied waiver of legal privilege in that advice. Although the privileged material may have been of relevance to a Court’s fact-finding exercise, relevance was not in itself sufficient to give rise to an implied waiver of privilege. Fairness was not a touchstone from which the Court could determine whether or not there had been a waiver.

Service Not Valid Where Claimant Failed to Communicate that Service Would be by Fax
Brown v. Innovatorone QBD, 19/6/09
Andrew Smith J. held that where CPR 6.3 provides for service of a claim form by fax, the mere fact that a Claimant’s solicitor has received correspondence from a Defendant’s solicitor on writing paper setting out their fax number does not mean that a claim form can be validly served by sending it to that fax number. The situation would only be different if the Claimant had been told by the Defendant that their solicitors should be served under CPR 6.7. Although the Defendant had suffered no prejudice as a result of the proceedings being served upon their solicitors rather than upon them personally, the mere absence of prejudice was not sufficient to make an order to permit service by an alternative method pursuant to CPR 6.15.

All information on this site was believed to be correct by the relevant authors at the time of writing. All content is for information purposes only and is not intended as legal advice. No liability is accepted by either the publisher or the author(s) for any errors or omissions (whether negligent or not) that it may contain. 

The opinions expressed in the articles are the authors' own, not those of Law Brief Publishing Ltd, and are not necessarily commensurate with general legal or medico-legal expert consensus of opinion and/or literature. Any medical content is not exhaustive but at a level for the non-medical reader to understand. 

Professional advice should always be obtained before applying any information to particular circumstances.

Excerpts from judgments and statutes are Crown copyright. Any Crown Copyright material is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of OPSI and the Queen’s Printer for Scotland under the Open Government Licence.